[Medieval People by Eileen Edna Power]@TWC D-Link book
Medieval People

CHAPTER III
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Saint Marc, tu le aie,'[10] who, hearing, could have doubted that Venice, defier of Rome and conqueror of Constantinople, was the finest, richest, most beautiful, and most powerful city in the world?
But was she?
Listen and judge.

Thousands of miles away from Venice, across the lands and seas of Asia, a little south of the Yangtze River and close to the sea stood the city of Kinsai or Hangchow, the capital of the Sung emperors, who ruled Southern China, not yet (in 1268) conquered by the Tartars.[11] Like Venice, Kinsai stood upon lagoons of water and was intersected by innumerable canals.

It was a hundred miles in circuit, not counting the suburbs which stretched round it, and there was not a span of ground which was not well peopled.

It had twelve great gates, and each of the twelve quarters which lay within the gates was greater than the whole of Venice.

Its main street was two hundred feet wide, and ran from end to end of the city, broken every four miles by a great square, lined with houses, gardens, palaces, and the shops of the artisans, who were ruled by its twelve great craft gilds.


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